Dense Gas, Dynamical Equilibrium Pressure, and Star Formation in Nearby Star-Forming Galaxies
Molly J. Gallagher, Adam K. Leroy, Frank Bigiel, Diane Cormier,, Mar\'ia J. Jim\'enez-Donaire, Eve Ostriker, Antonio Usero, Alberto D., Bolatto, Santiago Garc\'ia-Burillo, Annie Hughes, Amanda A. Kepley, Mark, Krumholz, Sharon E. Meidt, David S. Meier, Eric J. Murphy

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to explore how dense gas fraction, star formation, and environment interrelate in nearby galaxies, revealing environment-dependent variations in dense gas tracers and star formation efficiency.
Contribution
It demonstrates that dense gas fraction and star formation efficiency depend strongly on local environment, challenging the notion of a universal dense gas-star formation relation.
Findings
Dense gas fraction correlates with molecular surface density, stellar density, and dynamical pressure.
Dense gas tracers become faint at large galactic radii, with ratios as low as 0.01.
Star formation efficiency per dense gas decreases in high-density and high-pressure regions.
Abstract
We use new ALMA observations to investigate the connection between dense gas fraction, star formation rate, and local environment across the inner region of four local galaxies showing a wide range of molecular gas depletion times. We map HCN (1-0), HCO (1-0), CS (2-1), CO (1-0), and CO (1-0) across the inner few kpc of each target. We combine these data with short spacing information from the IRAM large program EMPIRE, archival CO maps, tracers of stellar structure and recent star formation, and recent HCN surveys by Bigiel et al. and Usero et al. We test the degree to which changes in the dense gas fraction drive changes in the SFR. (tracing the dense gas fraction) correlates strongly with (tracing molecular gas surface density), stellar surface density, and dynamical equilibrium pressure, . Therefore, becomes very…
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